April 28th, 2026

We've added integrity reports to Evalmee to help you analyze exam attempts with potential cheating risks.
Previously, suspicious events were visible within the submissions. The integrity report now groups affected examinees in a dedicated space, separate from grading and results.

For each exam attempt, you can now manually flag the integrity as:
Respected
Not respected, if you confirm the examinee cheated
To review, if you want to decide later
You can also add an internal note to keep a record of your decision.
Once you've made a decision for a examinee, Evalmee automatically moves to the next one. This lets you review at-risk cases faster.

We've added a graph showing the examinee's journey through the different pages or exercises of the exam. You can now see at a glance the order in which the examinee viewed the question pages and where they spent their time.
We've also revamped the timeline:
Similar events have been grouped
Exits shorter than 1s are no longer displayed by default
Time added
You can now zoom with Ctrl + mouse wheel (or Command + wheel on Mac) and pan through the timeline by clicking
We rebuilt the analytics from scratch so you have fewer cases to review manually. Notable improvements on:
exam exits
handling of exams opened across multiple browsers or devices
We've also improved how we handle many edge cases: use of the browser's "back" button, browsers blocking screenshots, computer shutdown during the exam, etc.
Support for grading criteria on spreadsheet and diagram questions
Improved quality of the grading assistant
Very wide tables in open-ended answers can now be scrolled
Fixed a bug in Excel question imports when a cell contained only non-printable characters